Eviulisoma commelina, Enghoff, 2018

Enghoff, Henrik, 2018, A mountain of millipedes VII: The genus Eviulisoma Silvestri, 1910, in the Udzungwa Mountains, Tanzania, and related species from other Eastern Arc Mountains. With notes on Eoseviulisoma Brolemann, 1920, and Suohelisoma Hoffman, 1963 (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Paradoxosomatidae), European Journal of Taxonomy 445, pp. 1-90 : 32-34

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2018.445

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:852A3F68-B728-413A-B12E-56F306D56C35

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5681590

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/ADAC88CB-9F53-4CF4-A784-47B874C7166B

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:ADAC88CB-9F53-4CF4-A784-47B874C7166B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Eviulisoma commelina
status

sp. nov.

Eviulisoma commelina View in CoL sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: ADAC88 CB-9F53-4CF4- A 784-47B874C7166B

Fig. 15 View Fig. 15

Diagnosis

Differs from other species of the E. kwabuniense group by having the solenophore somewhat shorter than the smooth map and iap, in combination with the small size of the intermediate apical lobe of the solenophore, compared with the very long, slender dorsal and ventral lobes.

Etymology

The name is a noun in apposition, referring to the one short and two long apical lobes of the solenophore. Commelina L. is a genus of plants (ʻdayflowersʼ) with flowers characterized by one small and two large petals. Linnaeus (1737: 79) dedicated this genus to three members of the family Commelijn, two of whom were well-known botanists, while the third accomplished nothing (at least not in botany); see also Wijnand (1983: 11).

Material studied (total: 1 ♂)

Holotype TANZANIA: ♂, Iringa Region, Iringa District, New Dabaga / Ulangambi FR, 08°05′34.5″ S, 35°51′31.3″ E, montane, 1800–1900 m a.s.l., Plot 16, 15–16 Nov. 2000, Frontier Tanzania leg. ( ZMUC). GoogleMaps

Description (male)

SIZE. Length 14 mm, max. width 1.5 mm.

COLOUR. Completely pallid after 17 years in alcohol, possibly not due to fading, cf. remarks under E. ottokrausi sp. nov.

ANTENNAE. Reaching back to end of ring 3.

BODY RINGS. Paranota completely absent. Stricture between pro- and metazonite striolate. A transverse row of setae on pre-gonopodal rings, a few scattered setae seen on post-gonopodal rings.

HYPOPROCT. Trapeziform with three apical tubercles.

LEGS. Stout, short, length 0.9× body width. Relative lengths of podomeres: femur = prefemur> tarsus> postfemur = tibia. Scopulae on femur, postfemur, tibia and tarsus, continuing until last legs, except on femur.

STERNUM 5. A rounded-rectangular process between legs 4.

STERNUM 6. Deeply excavated. Rim of excavation simple.

GONOPODS ( Fig. 15 View Fig. 15 ). Coxal lobe (cxl) large. Prefemoral part (prf) ca half as long as acropodite. Mesal and intermediate acropodital processes (map and iap) largely identical, slender, smooth, pointed rods. Solenophore (sph) large, ca 0.8 × as long as acropodital processes, folded around solenomere (slm), three-lobed, dorsal and ventral lobes (sph-d and sph-v) finger-shaped, much longer than pointedtriangular intermediate lobe (sph-i).

Distribution and habitat

Known only from the New Dabaga /Ulangambi FR. Altitude 1800–1900 m a.s.l.

ZMUC

Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF